Skeleton of hero World War II carrier pigeon found in chimney with a secret message

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Skeleton of hero World War II carrier pigeon found in chimney with a secret message still attached to its leg

He had survived the perilous flight back from Nazi-occupied territory hundreds of miles away.

Exhausted, the British ‘spy’ pigeon swooped down on a chimney in Surrey for a rest.

And there, sadly, he fell off his perch. Perhaps overcome by fumes from the fire below, he died – with a vital coded message in a tiny capsule still strapped to his leg.

His remains lay undiscovered in the chimney for around 70 years until the home’s current owner David Martin recently decided to restore the fireplace.

‘The chimney was full of twigs and rubbish,’ he said yesterday. ‘We were stunned by how much came out. Then I started finding bits of a dead pigeon. We thought it might be a racing pigeon until we spotted the red capsule.’

The former probation officer and his wife Anne, both 74, unscrewed the capsule and found a hand-written message inside on a ‘cigarette paper thin’ piece of paper.

It has been sent to code breakers at Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire, the intelligence centre where work to crack the Nazi Enigma code shortened the war by years, and to their modern-day counterparts at GCHQ in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, who also are trying to decipher it.

Mr Martin said: ‘It will be amazing if we discover an unknown detail from such an important part of British history.’

Some 250,000 pigeons were deployed in the Second World War. Able to fly at a mile a minute, they carried messages from behind enemy lines and, like a forerunner of the ‘black box’, accompanied RAF bomber crews in case they crashed.

Experts say the red capsule Mr Martin found is the type used by the Special Operations Executive. Their human agents undertook sabotage missions such as blowing up trains, bridges and factories in German-occupied territory.

The message was written by a Sergeant W Stott and contains columns of groups of five letters. It is thought that its intended recipient, ‘X02’, is code for Bomber Command.

One theory is that the message may have been requesting a bombing raid somewhere. Another is that the pigeon was bound for Field Marshal Montgomery’s HQ in Reigate, Surrey, from where he planned the D-Day landings.

Homing pigeons were taken on the D-Day invasion and released by Allied Forces to keep generals back on English shores updated on the operation.

Some pigeons were based at Bletchley Park, which is now a museum. But Colin Hill, curator of its permanent ‘Pigeons at War’ exhibition, said all of the pigeon messages in its archives are in long-hand, not code.

‘The message Mr Martin found must be highly top secret,’ Mr Hill said. ‘The aluminium ring found on the bird’s leg tells us it was born in 1940, and we know it’s an Allied Forces pigeon because of the red capsule it was carrying, but that’s all we know.’

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David Martin with the remains of a carrier pigeon which he discovered behind his fireplace

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Historians believe the message, which was written by a Sergeant W. Stott, will provide unique insight into the war. It was discovered rolled up in the red capsule attached to the pigeon

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The message contains 27 codes, each made up of combinations of five numbers and letters

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The bird could have been on its way to wartime decoding HQ Bletchley Park, in Buckinghamshire (pictured). Code-crackers are now frantically trying to decipher the message, which never reached its intended recipient

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Experts believe the pigeon and coded message may have been flying back from Nazi Germany to General Montgomery Headquarters in Reigate, Surrey. General Montgomery is pictured in 1944

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LOL, the story was up on BBC a few days ago, and they pointed out they found the skeleton and message capsule something like 20 years ago. They contacted the IWM and they ignored them, a few years back they mentioned it to the Bletchly Park museum and only just heard back from them this year. It had been so long since they had talked to Bletchly the wife said she had forgotten all about it.
 
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Interesting in a couple of ways. The Sender obviously had time to encode the message and he sent the original message and a copy. There is NO year mentioned, so it would have been sent as a message that was obvious to the Receiver.

There is a clue in the time group at the bottom of the message. "1525/6" Might we extend this to 1525 hours, ( 3:25 pm ) on the 6 th. day of the obvious month / year? If so, a good candidate for the origin of the message might be Normandy, on the 6th. Day of June, 1944. Since the Pigeon was born in 1940, this has to be WWII.

There is another clue in the message, the hand written "lib 1625." Could this be the SECOND pigeon sent, and "liberated" one hour after the original one was sent? The time or Origin at the bottom near this hand written time was clearly underlined to denote the difference.

This "second Pigeon" theory, (and it is just a theory) has possibilities as the "lib 1625" seems to be written by a different pen. Just above this "lib 1625" are two other entries that seem to be written with the same pen. - NURP 40 TW 194 -and- NURP 37 OK 76 - Might these be Map References where the two Pigeons were released? The "RP" might be "release point" and the two of these references would indicate the second pigeon message.

Now, if anyone has access to Invasion Maps, and these are true map references, then it should be fairly simple to find out what Unit was at that position at those times. Knowing this, it might be possible to locate the Sender, Sgt. W. Stott, to a particular unit.

If a code book was used, it might be possible to decript the message but if a one time pad was used, it will probably never be known.

And, as I have said, this is a THEORY and loosely based on some educated guesses and experience, and maybe a bit stretched, but if the message is ever decoded, it will be interesting to see how close I came.
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There's a time stamp on the full message sheet. "Time of Origin 1522"

27 might refer to the total number of 5-letter groups?

A clue might be that the message starts and ends with the same 5 letters.
 
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